Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Global Rights Index is a world-wide assessment of trade union and human rights by country. Updated annually in a report issued by the International Trade Union Confederation, the index rates countries on a scale from 1 (best) through to 5+ (worst).
The International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) (French: Confédération syndicale internationale (CSI); German: Internationaler Gewerkschaftsbund (IGB); Spanish: Confederación Sindical Internacional (CSI)) is the world's largest trade union federation.
The Council of Global Unions (CGU) is made up of ten global union federations (which affiliates national-level sectoral trade unions), the largest international federation of national centres (the ITUC) and the trade union body to the OECD (TUAC).
Labor unions first developed in Costa Rica in the late 1880s. [26] The first unions were organized with the help of the Catholic Church. [27] By 1913, the first International Workers Day was celebrated and unions, supported in particular by the Popular Vanguard Party, [27] pushed for Alfredo González Flores' tax reforms. Unions grew in number ...
Democratic Trade Union Confederation of Romania; National Confederation of Free Trade Unions of Romania - Brotherhood; National Trade Union Bloc; National Trade Union Confederation (Romania) National Trade Union Confederation - Meridian; General Association of All Workers of Romania; Deșteptarea (1879) [1]
Pages in category "International Trade Union Confederation" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 269 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
In November 2006, two international union organizations were created, the ITUC and the Council of Global Unions that emerged from a reorganization of the international trade union movement (which was divided because of post-war divisions). ITUC is the result of the breakup of both the WCL and ICFTU for the purposes of uniting under one ...
Under the 1992 Labour Code, trade unions must be registered by the government, public sector teacher unions in particular have been rejected. Agriculture and informal workers – a majority of Cameroon workforce are excluded from joining or forming trade unions. Trade unions cannot mix both public and private sector workers. The right to strike